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@loonies
loonies / 1_phpunit-api.md
Last active January 19, 2024 07:34
PHPUnit Cheat Sheet

PHPUnit API reference

  • version 3.6

TODO

Check those constraints:

$this->anything()
@imjasonh
imjasonh / markdown.css
Last active February 12, 2024 17:18
Render Markdown as unrendered Markdown (see http://jsbin.com/huwosomawo)
* {
font-size: 12pt;
font-family: monospace;
font-weight: normal;
font-style: normal;
text-decoration: none;
color: black;
cursor: default;
}
@pklaus
pklaus / StatusIcon.py
Created February 15, 2010 20:36
StatusIcon – A Simple Tray Icon Application Using PyGTK
#!/usr/bin/env python
# found on <http://files.majorsilence.com/rubbish/pygtk-book/pygtk-notebook-html/pygtk-notebook-latest.html#SECTION00430000000000000000>
# simple example of a tray icon application using PyGTK
import gtk
def message(data=None):
"Function to display messages to the user."

Upload images to GitHub

  1. Create a new issue on GitHub.

  2. Drag an image into the comment field.

  3. Wait for the upload process to finish.

  4. Copy the URL and use it in your Markdown files on GitHub.

@jbenet
jbenet / simple-git-branching-model.md
Last active April 9, 2024 03:31
a simple git branching model

a simple git branching model (written in 2013)

This is a very simple git workflow. It (and variants) is in use by many people. I settled on it after using it very effectively at Athena. GitHub does something similar; Zach Holman mentioned it in this talk.

Update: Woah, thanks for all the attention. Didn't expect this simple rant to get popular.

@CMCDragonkai
CMCDragonkai / http_streaming.md
Last active April 10, 2024 21:00
HTTP Streaming (or Chunked vs Store & Forward)

HTTP Streaming (or Chunked vs Store & Forward)

The standard way of understanding the HTTP protocol is via the request reply pattern. Each HTTP transaction consists of a finitely bounded HTTP request and a finitely bounded HTTP response.

However it's also possible for both parts of an HTTP 1.1 transaction to stream their possibly infinitely bounded data. The advantages is that the sender can send data that is beyond the sender's memory limit, and the receiver can act on

@nikic
nikic / objects_arrays.md
Last active April 12, 2024 17:05
Post explaining why objects often use less memory than arrays (in PHP)

Why objects (usually) use less memory than arrays in PHP

This is just a small post in response to [this tweet][tweet] by Julien Pauli (who by the way is the release manager for PHP 5.5). In the tweet he claims that objects use more memory than arrays in PHP. Even though it can be like that, it's not true in most cases. (Note: This only applies to PHP 5.4 or newer.)

The reason why it's easy to assume that objects are larger than arrays is because objects can be seen as an array of properties and a bit of additional information (like the class it belongs to). And as array + additional info > array it obviously follows that objects are larger. The thing is that in most cases PHP can optimize the array part of it away. So how does that work?

The key here is that objects usually have a predefined set of keys, whereas arrays don't:

@emiller
emiller / git-mv-with-history
Last active April 17, 2024 21:06
git utility to move/rename file or folder and retain history with it.
#!/bin/bash
#
# git-mv-with-history -- move/rename file or folder, with history.
#
# Moving a file in git doesn't track history, so the purpose of this
# utility is best explained from the kernel wiki:
#
# Git has a rename command git mv, but that is just for convenience.
# The effect is indistinguishable from removing the file and adding another
# with different name and the same content.
@ziadoz
ziadoz / awesome-php.md
Last active April 17, 2024 21:06
Awesome PHP — A curated list of amazingly awesome PHP libraries, resources and shiny things.